Brown (the guy on the right) started Impossible Foods in 2011 after coming up with the idea while on sabbatical for his teaching gig at Stanford.

"I wanted to pick the most important problem in the world to work on and I decided that, without question, the biggest threat to the global environment right now was the use of animals for food," he said on stage at Code. "And I thought it was a solvable problem."

Uncooked, Impossible Foods' plant meat looks a lot like regular ground beef. Its major sources of proteins are wheat, potato, soy, and yeast. The major fat source is coconut. It also has a couple of plant-derived fibers and micronutrients, with a molecule called "heme" as the magic ingredient that gives it its meaty characteristics.

Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro

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"You're not going to get anything that appeals to a hardcore meat lover by just mushing together a bunch of vegetables," Brown says. At Vox Media's Code conference in Southern California this year, attendees got to taste Impossible's burgers. You can actually hear the burger sizzling on the grill:

Although there were lots of special foods at the conference, the Impossible burgers had the longest line.

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When I finally picked up my sample, it looked and smelled like a regular hamburger, gussied up as it was with all the typical trappings like lettuce and tomato.

Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro

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The only real difference I noticed right off the bat was that the top had a special crispness you don't really see with regular meat.

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To me, that ended up being one of the best parts. A few bites in and I was convinced I could have been eating a real beef burger. Although the burger wasn't quite as succulent as what you'd find at your typical BBQ, it was still thick, tender, and absolutely delicious, with the slight crunch on the outside an unexpected benefit.

Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro

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Here's a better look at how the outside grills.

Screenshot / YouTube

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The consensus? I am 100% ready to say goodbye to my occasional cheeseburger in favor of this plant-y replacement.

The team is testing it with different chefs and in small venues across the US, with the goal of shipping the product by the end of the year. At first, Impossible Foods will sell its meat for roughly the same price as organic beef, but Brown expects that in "a couple of years" the company will be able to sell it at a price that's on par with normal supermarket ground beef.

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Ultimately, he wants Impossible Foods to reach the scale where it can sell its product to people in the developing world for even lower prices.